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         Mauchly John:     more detail
  1. Fellows of the American Statistical Association: Milton Friedman, Kenneth Arrow, James Tobin, John Mauchly, Emil Julius Gumbel
  2. Computer Designers: Alan Turing, John Von Neumann, Steve Wozniak, Seymour Cray, Konrad Zuse, J. Presper Eckert, John Mauchly, Butler Lampson
  3. Eckert, J. Presper, Jr. 19191995 Mauchly, John W. 19071980: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Computer Sciences</i> by James E. Tomayko, 2002
  4. John William Mauchly: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Nathan L. Ensmenger, 2001
  5. John Mauchly by Frederic P. Miller, Agnes F. Vandome, et all 2010-01-19
  6. Electronic Accounting (THE HOPPER) by Dr. John W. Mauchly, 1953
  7. Early Pioneers: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Computer Sciences</i> by Pamela Willwerth Aue, 2002
  8. ENIAC Progress Report: An entry from Gale's <i>American Decades: Primary Sources</i>
  9. The history of computing: A biographical portrait of the visionaries who shaped the destiny of the computer industry by Marguerite Zientara, 1981

61. Computer People Biographies
Lam, David Founder of Lam Research; mauchly, john - Co-developer of ENIAC;McCarthy, john - Early developer of Artificial Intelligence (1950's);
http://www.elsop.com/wrc/h_people.htm
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62. John Mauchly And Presper Eckert
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http://gsyc.escet.urjc.es/docencia/asignaturas/informatica-basica/transparencias

63. John Mauchly And Presper Eckert
First page Back Continue Last page SummaryGraphics john mauchly y Presper Eckert.
http://gsyc.escet.urjc.es/docencia/asignaturas/informatica-basica/transparencias
First page Back Continue Last page First page Back Continue Last page ... Graphics

64. History Of Computers
A directory of sites about the history of computers arranged categorically and with specific topic Category Computers History...... Memoriam JCR Licklider (19151990) (DEC.Com) JCR Licklider in Memoriam (MIT.edu)JCR Licklider, The Visionary (softexsolutions.com) -M- mauchly, john W. john W
http://www.hitmill.com/computers/computerhx1.html
hitmill.com/
Computers Main Page
History of Computers
History of Computers has moved.
Please click below and go to
http://www.hitmill.com/computers/computerhistory.asp"

Updated -

65. Reseach
1204, L, nd. 1205, Mailer, Norman, nd. 1206, mauchly, john W. Reports andNotes Regarding his Talks, nd. 1207, mauchly, john W. nd. 1208, McDonald, Dwight,nd.
http://www.uri.edu/library/special_collections/registers/bohnert/seriesVII.html
Title Table of Contents Biographical Note Scope and Content Note ... Return to Special Collections Special Collections
LEA BOHNERT PAPERS
MSG# 92
SERIES VII RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS AND MANUSCRIPTS DATES 11' (22 Boxes) 1952-1968, n.d. This series includes published and unpublished materials by writers who were of research interest to Bohnert. Subjects include library and information science, information retrieval, classification systems, science and computer science, and technology. Types of records include books, manuscripts, drafts, outlines, revisions, and research notes. The series is arranged alphabetically by authors' surname. The work of more prominent authors is contained in separate folders. Material is arranged alphabetically within folders. BOX FOLDER FOLDER TITLE DATES Arendt, Hannah n.d. Atherton, Pauline n.d. A (folder 1) n.d. A (folder 2) n.d. Bagg, Thomas C. n.d. Bar-Hillel, Yehoshua (folder 1) n.d. Bar-Hillel, Yehoshua (folder 2) n.d. Barthelme, Donald n.d. Batten, W. E. n.d.

66. Mauchly
Translate this page mauchly, john William (1907-1980), spécialiste américain des ordinateurs, surtoutconnu pour avoir construit les ordinateurs ENIAC et UNIVAC avec john
http://perso.club-internet.fr/jcdequin/Histoire_Informatique/mauchly.htm
L'Histoire de l'Informatique Mauchly, John William (1907-1980), spécialiste américain des ordinateurs, surtout connu pour avoir construit les ordinateurs ENIAC et UNIVAC avec John Presper Eckert. Il est né à Cincinnati, fils d'un physicien de l'institution Carnegie à Chevy Chase dans le Maryland. Il obtint un doctorat de physique à l'université Johns Hopkins de Baltimore en 1932. Il entra dans un petit collège de Pennsylvanie pour enseigner la physique et commença à s'intéresser aux ordinateurs électroniques. En 1941, il suivit un cours d'électronique orienté vers les applications militaires à l'école de génie électronique Moore de l'université de Pennsylvanie et y resta pour développer avec Eckert un ordinateur militaire appelé ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer). Cela conduisit à leur principale contribution à l'informatique : la machine à programme intégré EDVAC (Electronic Discrete Variable Computer). Ils furent aussi tous les deux membres de l'équipe de recherche informatique dirigée par John von Neumann . En 1946, Mauchly et Eckert créèrent la Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation, qui construisit l'UNIVAC (Universal Automatic Computer), utilisé pour la première fois en 1951 par le service de recensement des États-Unis. Suite à des difficultés financières, la société devint le division Univac de Sperry-Rand, où Mauchly fut directeur de recherche des applications informatiques jusqu'en 1959. De 1971 à 1973, il fut impliqué avec Eckert dans des conflits juridiques au sujet des brevets de l'ENIAC, qui furent annulés par les tribunaux à cause de travaux antérieurs de J.V.

67. Penn Special Collections-Mauchly Exhibition Introduction
We chose in this exhibit to focus on the career of john mauchly, partly to revealthe historical complexities of the process of invention that can only be seen
http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/rbm/mauchly/jwmintro.html
John W. Mauchly
and the Development of the ENIAC Computer An Exhibition in the Department of Special Collections
Van Pelt Library, University of Pennsylvania by Asaf Goldschmidt and Atsushi Akera
Department of History and Sociology of Science
University of Pennsylvania
Introduction
The year 1996 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the ENIAC computer, the first large-scale general-purpose electronic computer. Built at the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical Engineering, ENIAC is an acronym for "Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer," but its birth lay in World War II as a classified military project known only as Project PX. The ENIAC is important historically, because it laid the foundations for the modern electronic computing industry. More than any other machine, the ENIAC demonstrated that high-speed digital computing was possible using the then-available vacuum tube technology.
General View of the ENIAC, 1946.
Photograph of John W. Mauchly, ca. 1940-50. We attempt in this exhibition Recommended texts, currently in print, to learn more about ENIAC and the development of the personal computer:

68. Penn Special Collections-Mauchly Exhibition 7
The john Atanasoff Controversy Two controversies serve as counterpoints to the storyof john mauchly and Pres Eckert and the invention of the ENIAC computer.
http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/rbm/mauchly/jwm7.html
John W. Mauchly and the Development of the ENIAC Computer The John Atanasoff Controversy
Two controversies serve as counterpoints to the story of John Mauchly and Pres Eckert and the invention of the ENIAC computer. The first of these concerned the contributions of an Iowa State College professor, John V. Atanasoff, who had designed and built an electronic computing device between 1937 and 1942 with the assistance of his graduate student, Clifford Berry. While there are some doubts as to whether the Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC) was ever fully operational, Mauchly visited Atanasoff during the summer of 1941 and had a close look at the machine. The controversy has been over the extent to which Mauchly borrowed Atanasoff's ideas, and whether Atanasoff was the true inventor of the modern electronic computer.
Letter from John V. Atanasoff to J. W. Mauchly, 7 March 1941. (click to expand to 165k)
News account of ABC, 7 April 1942 (click to expand to 86k) Recognition for invention is highly prized among scientists and academic engineers, whose rewards tend to be more intangible than those of their counterparts in industry. Presper Eckert has been more fortunate than Mauchly in this regard, because his reputation is based on his contributions to the engineering work involved in developing the ENIAC computer. The material artifact itself stood as a demonstration of the superb engineering that had produced an operational large-scale electronic computer. As the principal architect during the early design work on the ENIAC, Mauchly could only rest his claims on the design contributions that he had made to the project. The invisibility of design work has made it possible for others to question from where Mauchly had derived his ideas.

69. Look Collection: Subjects: 44
Mature, VictorPerformances. mauchly, john W.(john William),19071980.Maugham, W. Somerset(William Somerset),1874-1965Family.
http://memory.loc.gov/pp/lookSubjects44.html
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Martin, Mary,1913- Performances.
Martin, Mary,1913- Public appearances.

Martin, Mary,1913- Social life.

Martinelli, Elsa.
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70. Eckert, Jr., John Presper
Fame Eckert, Jr., john Presper Born 1919 Birthplace Philadelphia,Pa. mauchly, john Born 1907 Birthplace Cincinnati, Ohio. ENIAC
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0906791.html

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Health and Science Inventions and Discoveries The National Inventors Hall of Fame Eckert, Jr., John Presper Born: Birthplace: Philadelphia, Pa. Mauchly, John Born: Birthplace: Cincinnati, Ohio Engineers Eckert and Mauchly invented ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Calculator), the first multipurpose computer, whose completion in 1945 heralded the dawn of the electronic era and provided a prototype for later computers. Although far less powerful than handheld calculators today, in its time ENIAC set speed records with more than 5,000 additions per second. ENIAC weighed about 30 tons, filled an 1,800-square-foot room, and included 6,000 manual switches. (2002) Died: Died: Eastman, George

71. WATSON
Hopper Laplace Named for Pierre Simon Laplace Lovelace Named for Augusta Ada KingCountess of Lovelace mauchly Named for mauchly, john W. Patterson Named for
http://watson.chemical.missouri.edu/history.php
This is WATSON
we: The single most important word in the world.
Today is: Sat Mar 29 21:15:00 CST 2003
History of the MOSIX CLUSTER
This is a history of our MOSIX computer cluster naming convention. Babbage
Named for Charles Babbage
Backus
Named for John Backus
Eckert
Named for John Presper Eckert Jr.
Friedmann
Named for Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Friedmann
Hopper
Named for Grace Brewster Murray Hopper Laplace Named for Pierre Simon Laplace Lovelace Named for Augusta Ada King Countess of Lovelace Mauchly Named for Mauchly, John W. Patterson Named for John Henry Patterson Poincare Named for Jules Henri Poincaré Watson Named for Thomas J. Watson Weidman Named for Randolph D. Weidman Co-Creator of the Computational Computer Lab, Chemical Engineering Department, University of Missouri. Main University of Missouri College of Engineering Chemical Engineering ... Search

72. Inventor Of The Week: Archive
john William mauchly and J. Presper Eckert are the scientists credited with theinvention of the Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer (ENIAC), the
http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/mauchly-eckert.html
This Week Inventor Archive Inventor Search Inventor of the Week Archive Browse for a different Invention or Inventor The Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer (ENIAC) John William Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert are the scientists credited with the invention of the Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer (ENIAC), the first general-purpose electronic digital computer, completed in 1946. Mauchly was born August 30, 1907 in Cincinnati, Ohio. His father was a physicist at the Carnegie Institute of Washington, D.C., and perhaps influenced by him, young Mauchly became adept in the sciences. This earned him the Engineering Scholarship of the State of Maryland, which enabled him to enroll at Johns Hopkins University in the fall of 1925 as an undergraduate in the Electrical Engineering program. In 1927 he enrolled directly in a Ph.D. program there and transferred to the graduate physics program of the university. He completed his Ph.D. in 1932 and became a professor of physics at Ursinus College near Philadelphia. J. Presper Eckert Jr. was born April 9, 1919 in Philadelphia. In 1937 he entered the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania and graduated in 1941. Afterwards he was given a post as an instructor at the Moore School. Meanwhile, in 1941, Mauchly had become a student there in a new program designed to educate students on defense technology. Eckert was one of his teachers.

73. John Mauchly (1907-1980)
First Previous Next Last Index Text, Slide 7 of 31.
http://www.csis.american.edu/museum/HOC_Class/html/slides/eniac/sld007.htm

74. John Mauchly (1907-1980)
john mauchly (19071980). Physics instructor, Ursinus College, attends a wartimecourse on electronics at Moore School. Attends AAS meeting December 1940.
http://www.csis.american.edu/museum/HOC_Class/html/slides/eniac/tsld007.htm
John Mauchly (1907-1980)
  • Physics instructor, Ursinus College, attends a wartime course on electronics at Moore School
  • Attends AAS meeting December 1940
    and meets John V. Atanasoff of Iowa State Univ.
  • Working on problems of weather prediction
  • Visits Atanasoff in Iowa, June 1941
  • writes “The Use of High Speed Vacuum Tube Devices for Calculating” August 1942 at the U. Of Pennsylvania (ignored!)
Previous slide Next slide Back to first slide View graphic version

75. No Match For "John Mauchly"
Sorry, no match for john mauchly . The nearest terms alphabetically are john Gilmoreand john McCarthy. Note some crossreferences don't lead anywhere yet.
http://www.dooki.com/cgi-bin/foldoc.cgi?John Mauchly

76. Historia De Las Computadoras IGÁlvarez
Translate this page ENIAC (1946). Desarrollada por Dr. john W. mauchly y john Presper Eckert, Jr.. EDVAC(1947). Desarrollada por Dr. john W. mauchly, john Presper Eckert, Jr.
http://coqui.lce.org/ialvarez/HISTO.HTM
Historia de las Computadoras
Comienzo de la Historia
Se contaba con los dedos.
Se contaba con piedras, palitos.
Primeras Calculadoras Manuales
Napiers Rods - Huesos de Napier (1617)
The Pascaline - La Pascalina (1642)
Leibnitz Calculating Machine (1673)
Jacquard's Weaving Loom - El telar de Jacquard (1801) Creada por Joseph Marie Jacquard, tejedor francés que quería encontrar un método más fácil para hacer sus telares. El hizo un aditamento para la máquina de tejer que era controlado por tarjetas perforadas. Esta máquina fue considerada el primer paso significativo para la automatización binaria. Esta máquina se encuentra actualmente en el "Smithsonian Institute".
Ada Byron - Lady Lovelace
Desarrollada por Dr. Herman Hollerith que trabajó para la oficina del Censo de los E.U. durante el censo de 1880. El diseño un sistema mediante el cual las tarjetas eran perforadas para representar la información del censo. Las tarjetas eran insertadas en la máquina tabuladora y ésta calculaba la información recibida. Hollerith alquilaba sus máquinas al gobierno. En 1896 fundó la "Tabulating Machine Company", la cual en 1923 paso a ser la "International Business Machines Corporation (IBM)".
ABC - Atanasoff and Berry Computer (1939 - 1942)
John Atanasoff y Clifford Berry.

77. Computing People: John Atanasoff
They turned him down. In 1940 Dr. Atanasoff attended a lecture givenby Dr. john W. mauchly at Ursinus College, near Philadelphia.
http://www.angelfire.com/ma/kilenm/2k03ppl.html
People in Computing
John Vincent Atanasoff - Forgotten Father of Computers
by Kilen Matthews
Beginnings and Education
John Vincent Atanasoff, born on 4 October 1903 in Hamilton, New York the first child of John Atanasoff and Iva Lucena Purdy took an early interest in mathematics. His father brought home a Dietzgen slide rule and young John's interest was captivated. He read the manual of how to use the slide rule and became fascinated with the underlying mathematical principles. With his mother's help, he began self-study of a college algebra book from his father's library. The family moved to Florida where John attended high school and graduated in only two years, receiving straight A's is all of his science and math courses. He did some work to accumulate funds and delayed his entry to university for short while. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the University of Florida in 1925 with a perfect record of straight A's as an undergraduate. Atanasoff received his master's degree in mathematics from Iowa State College in 1926 and a few days after graduation married Lura Meeks. He moved to theoretical physics for his Ph.D. that he received from the University of Wisconsin. During his Ph.D. work, the Atanasoff's first daughter was born then John returned to Iowa State College as an assistant professor in mathematics and physics. Inventor
Dr. Atanasoff had always been interested in finding better and faster ways to perform mathematical computations. Along with two others at Iowa State he had built an analog calculator called a laplaciometer, which analyzed the geometry of surfaces. Dr. His examination of the devices available at the time, including the Monroe calculator and the International Business Machines (IBM) tabulator left him frustrated with the speed and accuracy limitations.

78. Invention History At The Lemelson Center: Archives Finding Aids
11, Mason, Daniel R. 2/22/73. 12, mauchly, john, 6/22/70. 13, mauchly,john, 1/10/73. 14, mauchly, john, 2/6/73. 15, mauchly, john (Colloquium),2/23/73.
http://www.si.edu/lemelson/dig/computeroralhistory1.html
Resources for the history of invention
Collections on Invention and Innovation in the NMAH Archives Center
Computer Oral History Collection
43.5 cubic feet: 94 DB; 49 ShB
By Alison L. Oswald, March 1996
Revised by Alison Oswald, August 1999
Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Container List
Series 1: Transcripts, 1969-1973, 1977
Back to the main page AT=Audio Tape Only n.d.=no date NT=No Transcript R=Restricted Box Folder Series 1: Transcripts, 1969-1973,1977 Subseries A: Combined Index to Transcripts, 1986 Subseries B: Research Transcripts, 1969-1973, 1977 Acton, Forman Adams, Charles Aiken, Howard Alrich, John Allard, Gerry Alt, Franz Alt, Franz Alt, Franz Andrews, E.G. (See Stibitz) Argonne National Labs Armer, Paul Association for Computing Machinery National Conference Association for Computing Machinery 71 (NT) Association for Computing Machinery 25th Anniversary (NT) Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V.

79. Invention History At The Lemelson Center: Archives Finding Aids
16, mauchly, john, 6/22/70. 33, mauchly, john, 4/1/71 (cassette). 16, mauchly,john, 1/10/73. 16, 33, mauchly, john, 2/6/732/7/73 (cassette). mauchly, john,1/22/70.
http://www.si.edu/lemelson/dig/computeroralhistory5.html
Resources for the history of invention
Collections on Invention and Innovation in the NMAH Archives Center
Computer Oral History Collection
43.5 cubic feet: 94 DB; 49 ShB
By Alison L. Oswald, March 1996
Revised by Alison Oswald, August 1999
Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
Container List
Series 5: Audio Tapes, 1967-1974, 1977
Back to the main page Container List
AT=Audio Tape Only n.d.=no date NT=No Transcript R=Restricted Box Folder Series 5: Audio Tapes, 1967-1974, 1977 Subseries A: Reference Copies, 1954, 1968-1973 Acton, Forman Adams, Charles Aiken, Howard Aiken, Howard Allard, Gerry Alrich, John Alt, Franz Alt, Franz 3/13/69 (cassette) Alt, Franz Argonne National Laboratories Armer, Paul Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atanasoff, John V. Atchison, William Auerbach, Issac Bartik, Jean Bauer, William Beek, Allan

80. Kzoo.edu/~k98sj01/begin.html
john W. mauchly; john von Neumann K.5 LEGAL
http://kzoo.edu/~k98sj01/begin.html

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